As revenues continue to decline for newspapers in the U.S. and elsewhere, many have adopted paywalls or digital-subscription models, inspired by the New York Times‘ metered access plan. But there have been a number of significant holdouts, and one of the most prominent is The Guardian in Britain. Now, the paper’s CEO says it may start to charge readers for content—does that mean its commitment to not having a paywall has crumbled?
Chief executive David Pemsel says no. What the Guardian has in mind, he says, is expanding its existing membership-based program, and potentially offering content to paying members that isn’t available to non-paying readers. As he described it in a recent interview:
That might mean producing some journalism which only our members can access but no, it’s not a paywall. A paywall is a very different route, which of course we have considered, but putting one up now would diminish our reach and influence around the world, which is the opposite of what we’re trying to do.
Note: This was originally published at Fortune, where I was a senior writer from 2015 to 2017
Isn’t this just semantic quibbling though? Isn’t a membership plan where some readers get access to content and others don’t just a paywall by another name? Some of the reaction to Pemsel’s comments implied that the Guardian is trying to do an end-run around the idea of a paywall and launch one without actually admitting to it.
In reality though, a membership-based approach is very different from a one-size-fits-all paywall around your content, even a metered one.
A paywall is something that every reader runs into when they try to read something, and frequent readers run into the most. Eventually, some may respond to the nagging of the paywall police and subscribe, and in doing so they get access to everything. A membership plan turns this idea on its head: Instead of a penalty system, it’s a reward system—i.e., the most loyal members of an audience get access to new things.
News Corp. executive Raju Narisetti once called this a “reverse paywall.” Instead of penalizing your most frequent customers by having them run into a credit-card wall, you reward them with extra benefits.
The Guardian has had a membership-based model since 2014, and it involves special events such as readings or panel discussions, or local workshops on various topics. Other media outlets have also experimented with memberships, including Slate with Slate Plus, which offers exclusive access to stories and podcasts. The New York Times recently launched The Insider, which gives readers behind-the-scenes access to NYT journalists and special content.
Some digital-only entities have made a sustainable business out of this kind of membership reward program: TechDirt, a technology analysis site run by Mike Masnick, is built on memberships. Members get access to discussion forums and other benefits, and can even get access to content before non-paying members see it. The political news and commentary site Talking Points Memo is another example of a similar approach.
If it’s done properly, a membership model forces a media entity to change the way it thinks about its readers. Instead of “Hit them with a nagging popup and force them to pay,” the approach changes to “How can we figure out what they want and give it to them?”
USA Today columnist and media gadfly Michael Wolff wrote recently about the ongoing decline of print newspapers, and how the revenues from new digital efforts aren’t even close to filling the gap left by falling print ad sales. In order to make those numbers line up, papers will have to cut costs dramatically—but they will also have to figure out how to convince their readers to support them in more ways than they currently are.
One of those ways is a hard paywall, obviously. But that approach is fundamentally inflexible, and it treats every reader like every other reader. It’s a giant hammer, and so it treats every member of the audience as a nail.
It’s worth noting what Pemsel says about one of the Guardian‘s main reasons for opposing a paywall: Namely, that the newspaper wants to expand its influence, not restrict it, and putting up a wall means the latter. That appears to be part of the reason why Britain’s Sun newspaper took its paywall down recently—because it had lost a huge proportion of its readership, and that meant it could not be as influential.
Former Guardian editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger and current editor Katharine Viner have also talked about how having a paywall makes it inherently more difficult for a newspaper like the Guardian to engage in what Rusbridger called “open journalism,” where readers become part of the process. And a strong relationship with readers could be the only thing that saves both traditional print newspapers and the digital-only crowd from extinction.